I Live very close to him. I was fishing Doans pond in north Brookfield last night. He walked up and introduced himself. he also mentioned the Huddleston. Nice guy.
I live near South Pond and the they have a lot of trout in there and i didn't know what might be a good bait to try. i bought some Yum money minnows in trout color to try there?
i understand the soft bait getting ruined. I was concerned about that at a place like Quaboag.
Do you think a huddleston or ms would be better?
What about cobbsee? Do you throw swimbaits up there?
Sorry I did not notice this had mades its way back up to a current topic till just now.
Line: depends on water clarity, bass mood and cover. If you are fishing clear , open water, 20lb mono or floro is reccomended. In and around weeds and wood or in colored water you can use 50-65lb braid. A cost cutting move is to load up with 65lb braid then just add or remove a 4-5' leader of 20lb floro as needed. I just tie on the smallest quality swivel I can find. Owner and Sampo make quality swivels. I use a small Quality snap ( not snap swivel) to attatch the bait to the line. You don't want to tie direct because the mutes the action of the bait.
For a 7" slammer or the mini slammer or some of the mouse baits like the Muits Mouse, you can use a 7' to 7'6" Heavy action flipping stick. BPS sells some fairly inexpensive Bionic Blades that would work. The Citica will work fine for the smaller baits. If you are going to jump up to the 9" or 12" slammers or some of the other heavier baits, you need to upgrade your rod to a Swimbait rod. The better rod companied make rods specifically for swimbaits. Go to Tacklewarehouse.com and search "swimbaits" under the technique specific tab.
The 7' - 7'6" flipping stick can definitly be used as a frog rod and to flip and pitch jigs and creature baits.